PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1945 FAOE FOUR ThURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1945 AMOW .0 t 6p up% I (Pr 'Almiga'n val-ty WASHINGTON MERRY-GO-ROUND: No Quotas at Roosevelt College ID RATHER BE RIGHT: Science and ankind, Arnold's Report Fifty-Sixth Year I II CJ i - - - * 212 Edited and-managed by students of the University of Michigan under the authority of the Board of Control of Student Publications. Ray Dixon .. Robert Goldman Betty Roth . . Margaret Farmer Arthur J. Kraft Bill Mullendore Mary Lu Heath Ann Schutz Dona Guimaraes Editorial Staff . . . . . . . . Managing Editor . . . . . . . . . . City Editor . . . . . . . . Editorial Director . . . . . . . . Associate Editor . . . . . . . . . Associate Editor . . . . . . . . . . Sports Editor .. . Associate Sports Editor . . . . . . . . Women's Editor . . . . Associate Women's Editor Business Stafff Dorothy Flint. .........Business Manager Joy Altman ... ... Associate Business Mgr. Telephone 23-24-1 Member of The Associated Press The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for re-publication of all news dispatches credited to it or otherwise credited in ,this newspaper. All rights of re- publication of all other matters herein also reserved. Entered at the Post Office at Ann Arbor, Michigan, as second-class mail matter. Subscriptions during the regular school year by car- rier, $4.50, by mail, $5.5 REPNESENTEO FOR NATION.L ADVERTISING BY National Advertising Service, Inc. College Puihlers Representative 420 MADIsoN AVE. NEW YORK. N. Y. CHICAGO * BOSTON " LOS ANGELES * SAN FRANCISCO Member, Associated Collegiate Press, 1945-46 NIGHT EDITOR: ANNETTE SHENKER Editorials published in The Michigan Daily are written by members of The Daily staff and represent the views of the writers only. World University ESTABLISHMENT of United Nations Univer- sity to encourage scientific research and other branches of learning has been proposed by a rep- resentative at the International Educational Conference. World peace can best be achieved not only by controlling the means of war, but by in- creasing understnding between different na- tions. An International University would be an excellent means of promoting intellectual and cultural unity throughout the world. -Shirley Frank Palestine THE Truman-Attlee decision to allow only 4,- 500 homeless, starving European Jews into Palestine during the next three months is cal- lousness unbefitting human dignity. Those who are in the know are unanimous in contending that in three months the 100,000, now reduced to 95,500, homeless Jews in Europe will be-dead. To make the situation more concrete, visualize the total populations of Ann Arbor and Lansing, after years of bare subsistence, fenced within barb-wire enclosures, exposed to blizzards and otherwise hazardous winter weather, barely clothed and virtually unfed, for eight months, five of them already passed. The Jews in Eu- rope are in a comparative situation. Only the hope of finding eventual haven in Palestine has kept alive as many as still exist. If they do not go insane first, they will be dead in three months. While seated in soft leather chairs, gently puffing tobacco and probably sipping tea, Truman and Attlee yesterday did not less than sentence to death 75.5 per cent of Europe's homeless and miserable. How two ostensibly sane men ever came to such a decision is some- thing for the specialists in abnormal psychol- ogy to ponder. How two men, leaders of great civilizednations, could consider the selfishly motivated threats of an infinitely less potent group of nomads of greater consequence than the lives of 9,500 guilt- less, dying men women and children, is a crime that should spur to action all who abhor mass murder. Truman compromised America in agreeing to such a "solution." He also compro- mised the morality of Judaism and Christianity. Attlee is still here. We should all take a few minutes today to protest their decision by signing a petition to be mailed to our president or by sending a wire, letter or postcard to the White House. --Arthur J. Kraft Negroes and Press THE little knbwn and seldom publicized rules of the National Press Club barring Negro newsmen from membership or the privileges of the club as well as from press galleries in the House and Senate, were brought to the atten- tion of the public last week in a telegram written By DREW PEARSON WASHINGTON-Behind Mrs. Roosevelt's dedi- cation of Roosevelt College in Chicago today is a unique story. Formerly, Chicago's YMCA College, a low-cost institution in the loop, was supervised by leading banks. Suddenly they awoke to the fact that 25 per cent of the stu- dent body was Negro, asked President James Sprawling to put a quota on further Negro stu- dents. He refused, then handed in his resigna- tion..... Simultaneously, 92 per cent of the fac- ulty resigned plus 97 per cent of the students. The bankers found themselves without a col- lege.... Marshall Field, the Julius Rosenwald foun- dation, plus Chicago citizens then raised half a million to found a new low-cost college in the loop. The old YMCA College is no more and Roosevelt College begins today .... .It's the first time that both students and faculty walked out simultaneously. Pearl Harbor Facts ThERE is one important tip-off showing the ad- ministration knew war was coming in the Pa- cific, but expected it in the Philippines... . Adm. William Glassford, commanding U. S. gunboats in the Yangtze patrol, carefully shepherded his fleet out of Shanghai across tempestuous seas to Manila. They were flat-bottomed boats, danger- ous in.rough, deep-sea weather, but, knowing the Japs were about to strike, he made the emergency trip just before Pearl Harbor. . . At that time everyone expected the Japs to strike the Philip- pines, the Dutch East Indies, or Singapore. . . . One thing Pearl Harbor congressmen don't want to investigate is why, in view of these ex- pectations, General MacArthur got caught with all his planes on the ground, losing 300 fighters and all his flying fortresses.... If GOP congressmen do investigate-which they prob- ably won't-they'll find that the air force offi- AN IMPORTANT part of a student's education consists in learning to understand the prob- lems and views of people in other walks of life. It is especially important for the future well being of our nation that we students, with our middle and upper class backgrounds, try to un- derstand the problems of the labor unions, and of the individual union members. The strike now going on at the Hoover Ball and Bearing Plant gives us an excellent opportunity to take a laboratory course in labor problems and rela- tions. A group of eleven U. of M. students, myself included, went out to the plant last Friday night to show our support to the strikers by walking on the picket line with them. Some of us were working our way through school. Some were union members, both A. F. of L. and C.I.O. All of us felt that the union was right in their fight and deserved all the sup- port we could give them. What were they striking for? Why were these men and women walking around in the cold, picketing in three hour shifts, twenty-four hours a day? And why did we students back them up? What made us think they were right? We knew the strikers were fighting for a 30% pay increase, to make up for the 20 to 30% cut in take-home pay most of them had received when their work week was cut to forty hours. We felt that these people's kids shouldn't have to eat less just because men had stopped killing each other for a while. But an even more important reason for our back- ing them was our knowledge that these people and others like them provide the market for the goods our plants produce. We knew that if the working people didn't have the buying power to buy what the plants produced, our greatest market would be gone and prosperity would be impossible. We remem- bered articles in P.M. that told how Bethlehem Steel, and other companies, had doubled and tripled their profits during the war, and we felt that most companies could grant a 30% wage in- crease without raising the retail price of their products. We supported the other, less impor- tant demands of the strikers, because we felt that these people had a right to more of the good things of life, like vacations with pay, and smoking privileges. So that's why we were out there. We walked the picket line for three hours and found that it can get awfully cold on a November night in Ann Arbor. We walked in a circle in front of the plant gate, changing from a clockwise to a counter-clockwise movement, every half hour. We shouted, "About face" just before we turned around. Those of us who had been around un- ions a long time and knew the songs, sang, "Union Maid;" and "The U.A.W. Song." and "Solidarity Forever." It was pretty cold, but the songs kept our spirits up, and a woman in a big red hat brought us hot coffee a couple of times during our shift. When we were leaving, they thanked us for coming down, and we wished them good luck in their fight. We felt good as we walked toward home that night. We felt close to the people and their struggles. We felt close to the heart of Ameri- can life. -Leonard Cohen cr in conmand of those planes urged MacAr- thur to let him take them off Clark Field- where the Japs later smashed them. John L. Leis Orates BEETLE-BROWED John L. Lewis delivered a speech in the secret session of the labor-man- agement conference last week which has both labor and industry delegates buzzing. Though Lewis is the most feared and hated of all labor leaders, his speech brought cheers from industry members, frowns from certain labor leaders. "It's the best management speech of the whole wage-price issue," applauded H. W. Steinkraus of Bridgeport Brass, a management delegate. What the mine union boss demanded at the closed-door meeting was wage increases, but- and it was a very big but-he also demanded price increases for industry. This cuts right un- derneath the whole position of President Truman and many labor leaders, namely, that wage in- creases plus price increases are meaningless, would only mean that labor paid more for every- thing. President Truman and advisers have main- tained that, while this might bring temporary benefits for organized union labor, it would hurt teachers, white-collar workers and, later, organ- ized labor. Truman also maintains that industry has made enough profits from the war to afford wage increases and still make money, especially with taxes greatly reduced. The fact that John L. Lewis opposed this in- dicated to insiders a three-way play: (1) He wants to undercut CIO's Phil Murray, who favors the government's position of wage in- creases without price increases; (2) He is bid- ding to take AFL leadership away from Bill Green; (3) He isn't averse to wrecking the en- tire labor-management conference. John L. also has been handing out statements needling the steel and auto workers, telling them that they are asking for piddling wage increases. The Lewis statements are calculated to stiffen auto and steel workers' backs, make them dis- satisfied with CIO leadership. Also, they are likely to help precipitate a strike, and Lewis knows from his own sad experience in the recent coal strike that strikes right now can be most unpopular with the public. Naval War-Tgy A TERRIFIC backstage battle is raging be- tween the admirals over who will replace Ad- miral King as Chief of Naval Operations. The combat admirals want Adm. Chester Nimitz They saw him operate in the Pacific. Admiral King himself is pushing Adm. Raymond Spruance, also an A-1 man. Secretary Forrestal is supporting Adm. R.S. Edwards, now deputy chief of naval operations and a leading promo- ter of navy imperialism. . .. The first trial of the Kansas kingfishes begins today when the head of the "Kansas State Police faces a jury-if Judge Helvering doesn't postpone it....-. Last week Gen. Lucius Clay, No. 2 boss of Germany, announced publicly that U. S. au- thorities in Naziland have asked for an addi- tional $30,000,000 worth of food for the Ger- man people. Yet, on October 16, in a secret meeting of American generals, General Clay stated privately that the U. S. zone has a spe- cial reserve of 300,000 tons of food which it did not want to use until American public opinion favored feeding the Germans.... Jesse Jones, the man whom Franklin Roose- velt kicked out of the cabinet, is now the man who really runs his old job of Federal loan ad- ministrator-backstage. President Truman has closed his eyes to it, but Jones's position in Washington today is just about as powerful as ever. (Copyright, 1945, by the Bell Syndicate, Inc.) e/eteri to dI~eCltop Music Room To the Editor: Yesterday afternoon between classes I wan- dered up to the Recreation Room just off the Women's Lounge in Rackham to obtain a few minute's musical consolation. For the third or fourth time this term I was thwarted simply be- cause, leaving all the study facilities of Rackham vacant, students had congregated in the Recrea- tion Room where they pored over their books and ignored the majestic piano. Restrained by the courtesy my mother taught me, I did not dis- turb them with melodic chords, but now I'm re- gretting it. In that hour two other people with musical intentions were also turned away. They agreed with me that nothing is more harmful to the nervous system than the suppression of the urge to pour out your heart on a piano. There are barely enough practice rooms for music majors: surely the few pianos which re- main for amateurs should be kept as free as possible. I am hoping that you will publish this plea and that those responsible will be kind enough to leave vacant the Recreation Room (for recreation purposes only, as it says on the door) unless they are using the piano or throwing darts at the wall. By SAMUEL GRAFTON HYDROPONICS and Supersonics: We owe a debt of gratitude to General Henry H. Arnold, Command- er in Chief of -the United States Army Air Forces, for his brilliant and some- how exquisite report on air power and the future. One's first reaction is to wonder whether this document will not put Boris Karloff out of busi- ness; for a generation raised on such reading matter as this will go to see horror films, if at all, only to con- vince itself that there is still somej sweetness and light left in the world,E or to remember a primitive and naive era in which mad scientists worked for years contriving engines which could at most kill one beautiful lady at a time. The Arnold report makes this kind of hand killing seem quaint, like doing samplers. Somehow the item which seems most horrid in the Arnold report is a set of relatively pastoral para- graphs about gardening. The Air Forces do not believe that even the best of packaged rations provide a complete diet; and so, in future wars, our far-ranging troops will carry scientific gardeners along with them, who can grow vegetables out of chemicals and water, without soil. This science is called hydro- ponics, and was tried on the Ascen- sion Islands, and in several other places in this war. Soilless gardens, DAILY OFFICIAL 1BULLETIN in other words, for men whose feet have left the ground forever. One sees them, growing tomatoes in three weeks, on land resembling the side of the moon, and overhead rocket bombs whiz by at 3000 miles per hour; while a dog whimpers somewhere, and the atom splits. AS FOR the supersonic missiles of the future (the term applies to weapons and vehicles which travel faster than the speed of sound, as, for instance, the cry of "Help!") Gen- eral Arnold assures us that they will not require very great "direct manual skills in pilotage." Mechanical con- trols will do most of the work, so that even the kind of man who cannot tie his own shoes successfully can hope to wipe out a city. The last sporting element I believe someone has said, is being taken out of war; you can't miss. This thought, too, somehow constitutes a quiet horror, like the soilless airborne garden. General Arnold gives us three pos- sible ways of meeting the threat of atomic bombing. Read them, and fall on your face: For one, we can patrol the world incessantly, keeping a check on every plant in which atom bombs are being made. {But an ingenious reader writes to me to suggest that it would be safer if no nation knew where any other nation's bombs were stored; if we knew, the temptation to bomb the other nation's facilities t Publication in the Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all mem- bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Assistant to the Presient, 1021 Angel hall, by 3:30 p. in. of the day preceding publication (11:00 a. m. Sat-- urdays). THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 1945 11 VOL. LVI, No. 13 Notices Faculty, College of Literature, Sci- ence, and the Arts: Attendance report cards are being distributed through the departmental offices. Instruct- ors are requested to use green cards for reporting freshmen and sopho- mores, and buff cards for reporting juniors and seniors. Reports of fresh- men and sophomores should be sent to the Office of the Academic Coun- selors, 108 Mason Hall; those of jun- iors and seniors to 1220 Angell Hall. Please note especially the regula- tions concerning three-week absences. and the time limits for dropping courses. The rules . relating to ab- sences are printed on the attendance cards. They may also be found on Page 46 of the 1945-46 Fall Term Announcement of our College. E. A. Walter To the Faculty and Students of the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Beginning Monday, Nov. 12, the Office of Admissions with Ad- vanced Standing will be open only during the following hours: Monday- Friday, 11-12 and 2-4; Saturday 9-12. To the Members of the University Council: The first regular meeting of the University Council will be held in the Rackham Amphitheatre Mon- day, Nov. 19, at 4:10 p. m. Agenda: Reports of Committees on Student Affairs, Student Conduct, Honors Convocation, Foreign Students, En- rollment, Housing, and Official Publi- cations. Students, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts: Students who fail to file their election blanks by the close of the third week of the Fall Term (Nov. 21), even though they have registered, and have at- tended classes unofficially, will for- feit their privilege of continuing in the College. E. A. Walter School of Business Administration Convocation for students and faculty will be held today at 11:00 a. m., in West Gallery, Alumni Memorial Hall. Job Registration will be held in Room 205 Mason Hall on Thursday, Nov. 15, at 4:10 p. m. This applies to February, June and August gradu- ates,also to graduate students or staff members who wish to register and who will be available for posi- tions within the next year. The Bu- reau has two placement divisions: Teacher Placement and General Placement. The General Division in- cludes service to people seeking posi- tions in business, industry, and pro- fessions other than education. It is important to register now because employers are already asking for February and June graduates. There is no fee for registration. University Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information Colleges of Literature, Science, and the Arts; Architecture and Design; Schools of Education; Music, and Public Health: Students in these units who have not filed election cards in Room 4, University Hall may do so now only upon presentation of receipt showing paynent of $1.00 late elections fee. Attention, Pre-Medical Students: The Medical Aptitude Test, sponsored by the Association of American Medi- cal Colleges, will be given at the Uni- versity of Michigan on Friday, Dec. 14. The test is a normal, require- ment for admission to nearly all medical schools. It is extremely im- portant for all students planning to enter a medical school in the fall of 1946 to take the examination at this time. If the test has already been taken, it is not necessary or advis- able to repeat it. Further information may be ob- tained in Room 4, University Hall, and fees must be paid at the Cashier's Office by Dec. 1. Identification Pictures will be taken in Room 7, Angell Hall in the follow- ing order for students who registered Monday, Oct. 29 (the first day of registration). Please bring your reg- istration receipt. The photographic room will be open from 8:00 a. m. to 5:00 p. m. daily including the noon hour. New Freshmen and New Transfer Students: R-Z Wednesday, Nov. 14 Old Students : A-L Thursday, Nov. 15 M-Z Friday, Nov. 16 Miscellaneous: Saturday (8:00-12:00) Nov. 17. Department of Economics. The pub- lic is cordially invited. A cademic Notices Biological Chemistry Seminar will meet on Friday, Nov. 16, at 4 p. n., in 319 West Medical Building. "Epin- ephrine. II. Biological Studies" will be discussed. All interested are in- vited. Make-Up Examination: Political Science I and Political Science II: Wednesday, Nov. 21, 4-6 p. m., Room 2035 Angell Hall. Mathematics: Orientation Seminar will be held today at 3 p. m. in 3201 Angell Hall. The seminar will con- tinue with the discussion of Mathe- matical Literature and "the five num- bers." Concerts The University Musical Society: The Annual Christmas performance of Handel's "Messiah" will take place Sunday afternoon, Dec. 16, at 3 o'clock at Hill Auditorium. The fol- lowing will participate: Rose Dirman, soprano; Kathryn Meisle, contralto; Arthur Kraft, tenor; Mark Love, bass; Hugh Norton, narrator; Frieda Op't Holt Vogan, organist; the University Choral Union, Special Symphony Orchestra; Hardin Van Deursen, Con- ductor. Tickets, including tax, are: main floor, 65c; first balcony, 50c, and top balcony 40c. The Sixth Annual Chamber Music Festival will take place Friday eve- ning, and Saturday afternoon and evening, January 25 and 26 in the Main Lecture Hall of the Rackham Building. The Budapest String Quar- tet will give all three concerts. Course would be great; whereas, if we didn't know locations, etc., we might all stay our hands.) Second, General Arnold says we ought to invent a defense against the split and angry atom, but that we probably can't. Third, he sug- gests that "we might redesign our country for minimum vulnerability." And that's all. That's the absolute best we can hope for, if we pin our faith solely on military thinking. If we forget about making interna- tional political progress, these are all the choices we have; one of our best military minds tells us there are no others. It might not be so bad, if we could relax, and let these appalling bless- ings descend on us, without effort on our part. But there is a third quiet horror in the Arnold report: the weird future he sketches is going to cost a great deal of money, he says, and will require a huge research staff. We're going to have to pay through the nose to be scared to death. Why, we'll need six kinds of jet propulsion planes alone, the motorjet, the turbo- prop, the turbofan, the turbojet, the ramjet and the pulsejet; and you don't get those for nothing. Never before has there been more clearly posed the choice between a future in which science could, con- ceivably, work for mankind, and one in which mankind will slave for a science gone mad. (Copyrighlt, 1945, N. Y. Post Syndicate) Candidates for the Teacher's Cer- tickets, including tax, $3.60, $3.00, tificate for February: A list of candi- $1.50. dates has been posted on the bulletin Tickets for either the "Messiah" board of the School of Education, concert or the Chamber Music Series Room 1431 University Elementary are on sale in the offices of the Uni- S ch ool. Any prospective candidate versity Musical Society in Burton whose name does not appear on this Memorial Tower. list should call. at the office of the Recorder of the School of Education, 1437 University Elementary School. Detroit Civil Service Announce- ments for the following examinations have been received in our office: Jun- ior Accountant, $2,415 to $2,691, Semi-Senior Accountant, $3,105 to $3,588, Senior Accountant, $4,002 to $4,416, Technical Aid (Male & Fe- male), $1,952 to $2,084, and Interme- diate Clerk (Male), $1,886 to $2,018. For further details call at the Bureau of Appointments, 201 Mason Hall. New York Civil Service announce- ments have been received in our office for examinations for positions in var- ions towns of Westchester County. They include Senior Medical Social workers, Senior Psychiatric Social Worker, Intermediate Stenographer, Junior Typist, Intermediate Typist, Senior Account Clerk, Intermediate Account Clerk and Stenographer, and Junior Stenographer. For further in- formation call at the Bureau of Ap-' pointments, 201 Mason Hall. Choral Union Members: Beginning today, all rehearsals of the Choral Union will be held in Room B, in Haven Hall. Members will please be governed accordingly. Hardin Van Deursen, Conductor. Events Today Soph Cabaret: Try-outs for the dancing chorus of the floor show have been reopened. All sophomore women interested in participating are urged to come out 2:30 to 4:00 today and 3:30 to 4:30 tomorrow in the Garden Room of the League. The American Chemical Society will meet today at 4:15 p. m. in Room 151 of the Chemistry Building. Dr. Herman A. Bruson of the Resinous Products and Chemical Co., Phila- delphia, Pa., will speak on "The Chemistry of Acrylonitrile." The public is cordially invited. Fellowship of Song: Everyone will have fun in a free for all sing at Lane Hall at 4:30. The sing will vary from Hymns to Hillbilly Songs. Coffee Hour: A good time will be had by all who attend this informal get-together from 4:30-6:00 at Lane Hall. Hobby Night: The Camera Club, Art Club, and American Youth Hostel Folk Dance group will meet tonight at Lane Hall at 7:30. New members are cardially invited to attend. -Amy L. Downey BARNABY By Crockett Johnson Town Hall: An open discussion of Angell Hall Observatory will be "The Atomic Bomb and its Effect open to visitors on Friday, Nov. 16, on Our Way of Life" is being held 0 - - - . . , -- I -ML - 'M 7----------- -I c V 0 C, K